Good evening and thanks for joining us, I'm Nicole Winters.An estimated six million European Jews died in the Holocaust under Nazi Germany.But tonight... two survivors are sharing their stories at Gustavus Adolphus College...News 12's Ryan Gustafson joins us live in the newsroom with more.Margot DeWilde and Murray Brandys came from opposite ends of Europe - one from Holland and the other from Poland. They both ended up immigrating to Minnesota after World War Two, but not before they both went through an experience that few others survived.((15.49.25))"My name is Murray Brandys. I was born in Poland in 1925. at the age of 14, I was captured by the Germans."((15.44.09))"4-7-5-7-4, and a triangle."((15.44.37))All the triangles were different for theGermans to identify who they were dealing with."In front of a packed audience at the Gustavus Adolphus Interpretive Center, the two survivors shared their stories, touching on the events leading up to the German invasion, the deaths of their family and friends, and their time in the concentration camps.((15.53.00))We were working at that camp, digging ditches. I think it was for political purposes. We worked about 14 hours a day."((15.45.56))They did all kinds of experiments with those they had brought the people for and it was in my case, probably by my rescue that I survived."The presentation was sponsored by the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota and the Community Service Center at Gustavus Adolphus College.Live in the newsroom, Ryan Gustafson, News 12.







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